‘She doesn’t seem herself. She was angry and distant –’

‘That is herself,’ Froi interrupted.

‘… and hurt.’

Fine, now he was also to blame for Lirah’s feelings.

‘If you really want to know,’ Froi said, ‘the matter of not living in the palace has gotten to her. Where will her home be, Gargarin?’

‘What?’ Arjuro asked, hearing it for the first time. ‘Why wouldn’t Lirah live in the palace? She’s Quintana’s mother in the eyes of Charyn.’

Froi waited for Gargarin to explain, but he was silent so Froi spoke.

‘According to the Provincari, she’s part of Charyn’s shameful past,’ he said. ‘They want Gargarin in the palace, but not her, and Gargarin threatened to not take up the position of the little King’s regent. They, of course, have a second and even third option.’

Arjuro looked at Gargarin.

‘There is no other,’ Arjuro said, fury in his voice. ‘And since when do the Provincari make all the decisions? Is that what took place in Sebastabol?’

‘Among other things, which is why it would help us to have the Lasconians in our favour,’ Gargarin said.

Arjuro shook his head incredulously. ‘Those damned Provincari. They have no right to tell Lirah she can’t live in the palace and if they even try to take control of the godshouse I’ll curse every single one of them. Hypocrites. Bastards.’

‘And I think some of the lads and men here have said something to her,’ Froi said quietly.

Arjuro’s eyes met Gargarin’s.

‘I don’t like these people.’

‘Oh, don’t you start, Arjuro!’ Gargarin snapped. ‘First Froi, now you. What do you want me to do? Run a race around this wall and compete with them? They’re all we have. If we find Quintana, at least we have the numbers to get her into the palace safely. We need an army. This is the only one we have!’

‘And De Lancey promised you no army?’

‘Nothing,’ Gargarin said with frustration. ‘Do you think we’d be here with this lot if we had Paladozza behind us? De Lancey was all secretive and then he got on the defensive about both of us always ganging up on him.’

‘Well, we actually did,’ Arjuro said with a sigh.

‘You know him better than anyone, Arjuro,’ Froi said. ‘What could he be hiding?’

Arjuro shrugged. ‘I don’t know him anymore, despite our history. Before the day of weeping he was a Provincaro’s indulged son, bored and waiting to take over one day, so we were allowed to be as decadent and wild as we wanted to be. But he’s different now, and the De Lancey I got a glimpse of in both the Citavita and Paladozza is the type to have more than one plan up his sleeve.’

They heard more cries and shouting come from the little woods and even the Lasconian lads gathered close by.

‘What do you think’s going on out there, sir?’ one of them asked Gargarin. As if he would know and not Froi.

‘Either Bestiano’s army is killing each other or we have more visitors.’

Froi spent the rest of the night on watch with Perabo. The keeper of the caves had a disturbing way of staring at Froi and Gargarin and Arjuro as if he was going to reveal the truth about who he believed they all were to the Lasconians.

‘Nothing good will come of this for you,’ Perabo said quietly as the sun began to creep above the trees before them.

‘What?’

‘Regardless of our hope that she carries the first, and that she’s somehow safe, nothing good will come of this for you … personally … and you seem the person to take things personally.’

‘You don’t know me, Perabo.’

‘I saw it the first time in the caves in the Citavita, and then again the next two times. You want her. Not like other men want to control her, but you want to take care of her. Love her. Make her happy.’ Perabo shook his head sadly. ‘And that will not happen. They will never give you an opportunity to be that man. The Provincari and even Dolyn’s people will want a lord, a man of title. Quintana’s consort will be our showpiece to the rest of the land. “See. Look what we got. We might have a history of shame, but look what we managed to snare for our mad princess.”’

‘Always pleasant to be on watch with you, Perabo.’

But all the keeper’s words did was make Froi yearn for her more. He missed Quintana’s voice in his ear. Sometimes he tried to recall those early months in the palace with her and the indignant Reginita. But it wasn’t her voice he remembered. It was the clipped, cold voice of his ice princess. The one that could tear layers of skin from him by merely speaking. He had become used to listening to her words and not judging them by her tone.

‘I wonder what I’ll say to the little King first,’ she had murmured that last night in Paladozza.

‘Maybe you should tell him you love him.’

‘But what if I don’t?’ she argued. ‘I don’t know him. How can I love one that I don’t know? I’m frightened to see him. I’ve never seen a little creature. How will I know he’s not all wrong?’

‘And if he is all wrong, what will you do?’ Froi had asked.

She thought for a moment. ‘I’ll hold him tight and tell him that we’ll be wrong for this world together.’

Perabo shoved Froi out of his memories and pointed. As early light began to stretch across the sky, they could see more movement through the trees of the little woods. During the night, whatever had taken place out there had inched closer to them. Froi heard Perabo’s intake of breath. Behind them, the first of the Lasconians were beginning to wake, but for now, only Perabo and Froi waited for whatever lay ahead to unleash itself.

And unleash themselves they did. Horsemen appeared out of the little woods before Froi’s very eyes. What they lacked in numbers they made up for in strength and speed. If he didn’t know better, Froi would have sworn it was Trevanion leading them. No man looked more powerful than his captain on a horse.

‘If this is part of the Nebian army, we don’t stand a chance,’ he warned Perabo.

Perabo shouted out a command and the Lasconian lads on the wall were suddenly awake.

‘We’re under attack!’

Men scrambled for their weapons and orders were bellowed from all corners of the bailey. Froi looked back at the battlements of the keep and saw Dolyn’s men ready with longbows.

‘Take aim,’ Perabo shouted.

Froi heard the order repeated over and over again until it reached the keep. He took aim. More and more men climbed up to the wall to stand beside them, watching the force approaching. The horsemen gained ground, their powerful mounts punishing the earth beneath them, riding at a speed beyond reckoning.

‘Give the order!’ one of the Lasconians shouted.

‘Give the order,’ a voice rang out again, but Perabo waited, and Froi’s hand shook to keep the bow so taut. He felt the perspiration trickle down his temple but he kept his focus on the horsemen in the lead. Not one of the riders had raised a weapon, but their intent was obvious. They were going to enter the fortress regardless of how many soldiers stood on both battlements.

‘Perabo! Give the order!’ someone shouted.

And then, as the sun illuminated the clearing, Froi saw the truth.

‘Stop!’ he shouted. ‘Wait.’

‘Wait!’

‘Wait!’

He heard the order passed back to the battlements.

Yes, the voice inside him hissed. Or perhaps he did shout it aloud, because Perabo stared at him questioningly. Froi’s prayers had been answered in more ways than one.

‘Who are they?’ Perabo asked, as the horsemen reached the gates.

‘You mean what are they,’ a lad beside them muttered.

Froi grinned. He looked at where Florik stood and felt a gleeful vengeance in his heart. The Lasconian lads were going to get a beating.

‘Turlans.’

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